For nearly a decade, Rian Johnson has been one of Hollywood’s most reliably unpredictable filmmakers.

After sharpening his teeth on the cult noir Brick and the ambitious sci-fi mind-bender Looper, Johnson conquered blockbuster territory with Star Wars: The Last Jedi and then surprised audiences with the nimble wit of the Knives Out murder mystery trilogy.

But as the curtains close on Daniel Craig’s Benoit Blanc and Knives Out: Wake Up Dead Man hits Netflix this December, Johnson is already plotting a thrilling new course.

According to the director, his next film is a clear pivot, one that blends his roots in genre storytelling with a sharp new appetite for social tension and psychological games.​

Rather than dust off lightsabers or reboot his Star Wars trilogy ambitions, Johnson’s first post-Knives Out movie is planting its feet in what he calls “ ‘70s paranoid thriller” territory with a dose of science fiction.

In candid interviews with Empire and io9, Johnson said the film will tap into that decade’s preoccupation with surveillance, conspiracy, and systemic mistrust.

Referencing classics like The Parallax View and All the President’s Men, he notes his script is designed to “follow [his] nose,” letting the story’s societal anxiety grow from real-world paranoia rather than noir contrivances.

The twist? Johnson is adding a “light sci-fi element,” echoing his knack for layered worlds without resorting to space opera bombast.​

The move is no whim. Johnson has made waves for following his instincts even when that meant dividing Star Wars fandom. With his last three features all anchored by whodunit logic and ironclad plotting, he’s now drawn to the challenge of suspense built on uncertainty, technological angst, and shadowy motives.

For fans of Looper or Brick, the announcement feels both like a homecoming and a provocation: Johnson may finally be delivering the pulpy, clever, anti-institutional thriller that a sector of his audience has craved since his breakout days.​

Paranoid Thrills and Sci-Fi Shivers: The Vision Taking Shape

Johnson’s fascination with the intersection of control, technology, and truth seems tailor-made for this moment.

With every other modern thriller echoing surveillance-state anxieties, Johnson’s self-described “light sci-fi” infusion could take many forms: a cautionary near-future, chilling new hardware, or a paranoia-inducing social experiment.

But the core will be human uncertainty: the stories of individuals blindsided by systems too vast or too invisible to fight.

Insiders suggest the new project will favor a grounded, almost procedural suspense over the grand spectacle of Star Wars or even Looper’s bold time travel.

According to early reports from Empire and ScreenRant, Johnson is exploring ideas that expose the soft underbelly of modern society: misinformation, corporate power, invisible data trails, and the tension between autonomy and algorithm.

In other words, the thriller will channel the decade of Watergate and Personal Data Banks, but filtered through the lens of the internet age and psychological disquiet. These anxieties, Johnson suggests, have only grown more urgent since the 1970s, making a new approach fresh instead of nostalgic.​

It’s not just the concept that has people talking; it’s also the format. Following a three-film Netflix deal for Knives Out, Johnson is reportedly considering a broader theatrical rollout this time, seeking to harness the renewed hunger for immersive big-screen suspense.

As he said recently, the rush of communal theater-going remains irreplaceable, especially for stories engineered for maximum unease and jaw-dropping reveals. The creative departure is energizing for Johnson, who told Empire, “This is three [Knives Out mysteries] in a row. It’s probably healthy to see other people.”​

Beyond the Whodunit: Stakes For Johnson and the Sci-Fi Genre

The pressure is sky-high for Johnson’s latest, not least because expectations are so varied. After all, he’s gone from indie darling to one of the most talked-about directors in Hollywood, weathering both Oscar nods and viral backlash from the world’s most passionate fanbases.

Some critics see his new direction as a risk. Why leave behind a universally beloved franchise like Knives Out for the bruising ground of conspiracy-laced sci-fi?

Yet it’s precisely this instinct to innovate that has defined Johnson’s career. He has always brought personal voice and cerebral puzzle-making to genres long considered formulaic.​

Film historians point out that the 1970s paranoid thriller isn’t just a retro curiosity but a lens that’s uniquely suited to our data-soaked, distrustful present.

Movies like All the President’s Men, The Conversation, and Three Days of the Condor dissected political and corporate power in ways that remain deeply resonant, especially as digital surveillance and social fragmentation intensify.​

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Rian Johnson (Credit: CNN)

Johnson’s stated aim is not simply to resurrect genre tropes but to question new centers of influence, using speculative fiction to dramatize how technology both empowers and unsettles.

The Knives Out trilogy proved he could modernize the classic mystery for today’s audience; now, he’s betting he can do the same for sci-fi thrillers, fusing suspense, relevance, and a dash of satire.

As for who’s on board, casting details remain tightly guarded. But if Johnson’s last ensemble-driven projects are any indication, the film could attract powerhouse talent seeking more than caricatured villains or gadget-driven set pieces. For now, the project has sent both fans and critics into intrigue mode as they wait for updates.

What’s Next: An Unfolding Gamble and a Genre Ready for Reinvention

With Wake Up Dead Man wrapping up the Benoit Blanc era and Johnson poised to greenlight his own script as soon as it’s ready, anticipation is peaking. Streaming giants and theatrical distributors are both showing early interest, knowing Johnson’s reputation for pulling box office surprises and streaming gold.

The only sure thing is that this move cements his reputation for genre alchemy, combining plot acrobatics with heady questions about power, perception, and fear.

Whether Johnson’s new film rewrites the rules of sci-fi suspense or simply delivers a masterclass in contemporary paranoia, it promises a jolt of intelligence and unpredictability.

If the past is any guide, the director’s leap from whodunits to tech-noir will give audiences plenty to talk about and, yes, plenty to argue over when the lights come up.

Fans’ hopes for Keanu Reeves’ return as the occult detective John Constantine surged in October after the actor announced a fresh script draft for Constantine 2 had landed.

Reeves, who revived interest in the role with back-to-back successes like John Wick and his charismatic cult following from the 2005 original, sounded upbeat as he revealed his team’s plans to deliver the script to DC Studios.

Reputable outlets, including IGN and ComicBookMovie, confirmed that Reeves is optimistic, telling reporters he hopes the studio leadership will approve this new vision for the sequel.​

For years, Reeves and original director Francis Lawrence, along with producer and screenwriter Akiva Goldsman, have tried to advance the project amid Hollywood’s constantly changing environment. Early in 2025, DC leadership reportedly gave a tentative thumbs-up for the creative team to start drafting a new story.

The sequel, if made, promises a narrative set in the same dark, metaphysical world as the first film, a place where Reeves’s Constantine faces even greater torment and supernatural threats.​

However, this wave of renewed excitement continues to crash against the realities of studio politics and the blockbuster stakes of the modern DC Universe.

While fans call for more grounded supernatural tales rather than overblown CGI spectacles, filmmakers now find themselves contending with the expectations of DC Studios co-chiefs James Gunn and Peter Safran, who must balance nostalgia with their plans for a fresh DCU slate.

Studio Tensions and Timeline Tangles: Inside James Gunn’s Latest Response

Discussion about Constantine 2 reached a fever pitch when James Gunn, now steering the reimagined DC Universe, addressed the swirling speculation.

In a widely cited interview on the BobaTalks podcast, Gunn acknowledged that talks with Reeves have happened “on and off,” describing the creative team as “great guys” with ample talent. Still, Gunn was blunt: he had yet to see, let alone approve, a script for the next Constantine chapter.​

Back then, Gunn described any DC project outside the continuity of his new shared universe labeled “Elseworlds” as requiring something uniquely compelling to justify investment.​

Industry reporters have highlighted one major reason for the holdup: recent regime shifts at both Warner Bros. Discovery and DC Studios. With each leadership change comes a re-evaluation of legacy properties and new priorities for future blockbusters.

As Gunn’s DCU launches juggernaut projects like Superman and Creature Commandos, movies like Constantine 2 are left circling in development, threatened by shifting budgets, timeline bottlenecks, and creative risk aversion.

Where Does That Leave Constantine 2, and What Do Fans Want Next?

While no formal production schedule or release date exists, fans aren’t ready to give up. John Constantine, initially brought to life by Alan Moore and Steve Bissette in the comics, flourished as a cult classic through Reeves’s unconventional and gritty 2005 performance.

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James Gunn (Credit: BBC)

Online communities and entertainment outlets continue to fuel speculation, dissecting every interview and update.​

The script, reportedly penned by Goldsman, remains shrouded in secrecy except for promises that it will challenge Constantine with even darker twists and introduce returning cast members where possible.

Meanwhile, actor Peter Stormare, who played Lucifer in the original, has said publicly that Reeves holds high standards for the sequel and has pushed back against studio demands for “louder” or more “spectacular” scenes.​

As DC Studios juggles ambitious new plans with loyal audiences yearning for familiar faces, Constantine 2’s status remains precarious but not impossible. Reeves, Lawrence, and their team hold out hope that their “sleeper hit” can step back into the haunted spotlight provided they get a clear signal from DC Studios.

For now, all eyes remain on James Gunn and the ever-turning gears at Warner Bros. As fans await the next domino to fall, one truth is clear: John Constantine’s afterlife in Hollywood isn’t sealed yet, but only a bold, timely choice from DC’s new regime will determine if he rises again.